The New Testament never shies away from the reality of death. It stares it down, names it plainly, and yet—especially in Paul—refuses to let it have the final word. One of the most striking ways Paul does this is through his careful, deliberate choice of words for death. He does not speak uniformly. When describing the death of believers, he almost always reaches for the verb κοιμάω (koimaō, “to fall asleep”) rather than the blunt ἀποθνῄσκω (apothnēskō, “to die”). This is not mere poetic softening. It is theological precision rooted in the resurrection.
In 1 Corinthians 15:6, Paul writes that the risen Christ appeared to more than five hundred brothers and sisters, “of whom the greater part remain until now, but some have fallen asleep (ἐκοιμήθησαν).” Not “some have died.” Fallen asleep. The same language appears in 1 Corinthians 11:30, where Paul warns that many in Corinth are weak, sick, and “a number are asleep (κοιμῶνται)” because of unworthy participation in the Lord’s Supper. Even in the context of divine discipline, Paul frames believers’ deaths as sleep.
Why this consistent choice? Because for Paul, the death of a Christian is not the same event as the death that reigns over Adamic humanity. Death for the unbeliever remains thanatos (θάνατος)—a reigning power, the wages of sin, the last enemy. But for those in Christ, death has been redefined. It is no longer a master but a temporary interval, a sleep from which resurrection awakening is certain.
The Pattern in Paul’s Vocabulary
Paul’s usage is remarkably intentional:
– “ἀποθνῄσκω (apothnēskō)” – the ordinary verb for “to die.”
Paul uses it freely for:
– Humanity in Adam (“in Adam all die,” 1 Cor 15:22)
– Christ’s historical death (“Christ died for our sins,” 1 Cor 15:3)
– Unbelievers or neutral factual statements
– Occasionally believers when the focus is on the bare event or union with Christ’s death (e.g., Rom 6: “we died to sin”)
– “κοιμάω (koimaō)” – “to sleep,” used metaphorically for death.
Reserved almost exclusively for believers:
– 1 Corinthians 15:6, 18, 20
– 1 Corinthians 11:30
– 1 Thessalonians 4:13–15 (“those who have fallen asleep in Jesus”)
The metaphor works because sleep is temporary and implies awakening. Paul is not denying the reality of physical death; he is redefining its meaning in light of resurrection. Believers do not ultimately “die” in the Adamic sense. Their bodies are laid aside for a season, awaiting transformation.
Departure as Transition, Not Annihilation
This mortal body—the earthly tent we inhabit—is dead because of sin (Rom 8:10). At departure, we lay it aside. Paul consistently describes believers’ death as a gentle transition: away from the body and present with the Lord, the folding away of our dwelling, an unmooring rather than extinction (2 Cor 5:1–4; Phil 1:23).
Our old self is crucified with Christ, rendering the body of sin powerless now—and ultimately discarded when this corruptible frame is shed (Rom 6:6). While we remain in it, the Spirit subdues its impulses. At departure, what is sown in corruption rises incorruptible, clothed with the heavenly (1 Cor 15:42–54).
Paul’s “put off” and “put on” language captures this precisely: corruption discarded, incorruption embraced—with embodied continuity preserved. As John assures: “Beloved, now are we the sons of God, and it doth not yet appear what we shall be: but we know that, when he shall appear, we shall be like him” (1 John 3:2).
The Theological Foundation: Already Died and Raised with Christ
This linguistic choice flows from Paul’s core conviction: believers have already participated in Christ’s death and resurrection.
– “We were buried with him by baptism into death… we have been united with him in a death like his… our old self was crucified with him” (Rom 6:3–6; Gal 2:20).
– “You have died, and your life is hidden with Christ in God” (Col 3:3).
– “He who has died is freed from sin” (Rom 6:7).
Because the believer has already died positionally with Christ, physical death is no longer judicial condemnation. Death’s sting—its condemning power—has been drawn (1 Cor 15:55–56). What remains is a temporary separation of body and spirit, rightly called “sleep.” The person continues consciously in the Lord’s presence, awaiting the resurrection body clothed in incorruption.
John’s Gospel echoes this: Jesus tells the disciples about Lazarus, “Our friend Lazarus has fallen asleep (κεκοίμηται), but I go to awaken him” (John 11:11). When they misunderstand, Jesus speaks plainly: “Lazarus has died” (ἀπέθανεν, John 11:14). The plain word is true, but the resurrection-shaped word is truer for those who belong to Christ.
Old Testament Contrast and New Testament Privilege
Before Christ’s resurrection, Lazarus experienced a fuller “sleep” phase—like OT saints who “slept with their fathers.” Their bodies entered dormancy, and their souls awaited in Sheol, not yet in full conscious fellowship with God.
This could only end through Christ’s direct intervention. When He descended and triumphed, He awakened them—foreshadowing the resurrection life He inaugurates for all in Him.
Today, when a believer dies in Christ, the spirit is immediately at home with the Lord. Death remains a temporary body-spirit separation, but—unlike OT saints—the soul enters full, conscious joy, while the body awaits incorruptible raising.
Flesh, Body, and the Intermediate State
Paul’s anthropology deepens the picture. The present body (σῶμα) is intertwined with flesh (σάρξ)—the sin-prone principle inherited from Adam. Nothing good dwells in the flesh (Rom 7:18); the law of sin and death operates in our members (Rom 7:23). Yet the body itself is not morally evil. It is the “body of humiliation” (σῶμα τῆς ταπεινώσεως, Phil 3:21)—mortal, weak, subject to decay because of sin, but redeemable.
The Nakedness of Our Present Tent
This body, in its fallen state, bears the “nakedness” lost through Adam’s transgression—exposed to pain, sorrow, disease, sin’s impulses, and eventual death. Its original covering broken, we experience these effects fully now, groaning as we await full redemption.
Yet even amid this nakedness, grace offers present covering: “Buy of Me gold tried in the fire, that your nakedness be not seen” (Rev 3:18). Through refinement in the Word and God’s testing, believers receive spiritual protection—preparing us until resurrection glory clothes us completely.
“Crucially, “sleep” describes only the body’s state.” Like a bare seed sown in the earth—perishable, in dishonor, in weakness (1 Cor 15:42–44)—the mortal body is laid aside, dormant in the ground, awaiting glorious transformation. In this sowing, the body’s elements return to the soil, disintegration releasing the grip of corruption once and for all.
At resurrection, the heavenly body of glory (doxa) meets and raises the natural one—clothing it upon with incorruption, ensuring no trace of decay remains (1 Cor 15:53–54)—transforming the natural into immortal, that mortality be swallowed up in life. The earthly tent is folded away (2 Cor 5:1–4). To God, the natural holds eternal value—created good, redeemed in Christ, and destined to shine forever as the new creature, when the heavenly glory clothes and transforms it into incorruptible life.
Yet the believer—unlike OT saints—does not sleep or cease: to be “absent from the body” is to be “present with the Lord” (2 Cor 5:6–8)—consciously at home with Christ, beyond death’s reach, while the body rests temporarily.

When Paul says the “body of sin” is destroyed (Rom 6:6), sin’s dominion is broken through union with Christ. The body remains mortal and affected by indwelling sin until death or resurrection, but it is no longer enslaved.
Thus “sleep” perfectly describes the believer’s departure: the body dormant like a seed—its corruption released in the ground—the person awake and at home with the Lord, awaiting the trumpet when the heavenly glory clothes and raises it forever in the “spiritual body” (σῶμα πνευματικόν, 1 Cor 15:44), conformed to Christ’s glorious body (Phil 3:21).
A Pauline Timeline: From Thanatos to Glorified Awakening
| Stage | Key Terms | Meaning for the Believer |
Humanity in Adam | ἀποθνῄσκω, θάνατος, νεκρός, σάρξ | Death reigns; humanity dead in sin, enslaved, destined for judicial death. |
| Union with Christ (Present) | Crucified old self; body of sin destroyed | Sin’s dominion broken; believer already died and raised with Christ (Rom 6; Col 3). |
| Physical Death | κοιμάω / “fallen asleep” | “Body alone” dormant (seed/tent laid aside); believer immediately present with the Lord (2 Cor 5:8). |
| Resurrection | σῶμα πνευματικόν / δόξης | Body raised glorious—like seed sprouting in power (1 Cor 15:42–44); full union forever. |
Pastoral Hope
This is not academic wordplay. It is resurrection realism. When Paul grieves, he does not grieve “as others who have no hope” (1 Thess 4:13). He calls the dead “those who have fallen asleep in Jesus”—their bodies resting as seeds in the earth, their spirits already with Christ in conscious joy. Even disciplinary death (1 Cor 11:30–32) is framed by mercy: “we are disciplined so that we will not be condemned with the world.”
In a world that fears death or denies it, Paul’s vocabulary offers defiant hope. Those in Christ do not ultimately die. We lay aside this humiliated frame, we are immediately at home with the Lord, and one day the seed will burst forth—bodied, glorified, forever with Him.
Jesus said: “I am the resurrection and the life. Whoever believes in me, though he die, yet shall he live, and everyone who lives and believes in me shall never die” (John 11:25–26).
That is the gospel Paul preaches—and the reason he speaks of sleep.
